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Adult Aging, Cognition, Perception, & Sensation Presented by Gloria Perry & Debbie Barrineau EPY 8070 Cognition Rybash, Roodin, & Hoyer ( 1995 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Adult Aging, Cognition, Perception,


1
Adult Aging, Cognition,
Perception, Sensation
  • Presented by
  • Gloria Perry Debbie Barrineau
  • EPY 8070

2
Cognition
  • Rybash, Roodin, Hoyer ( 1995) define cognition
    as
  • the collection of processes that serves to
    transform, organize, select, retain, and
    interpret information (p. 92).

3
Perception
  • The authors define perception to be
  • the ability to detect structures and events in
    the environment (Rybash,Roodin, Hoyer, 1995,
    p. 93).

4
Perception influenced by Skill
  • For example, radiologists can identify tumors on
    x- rays that would appear as smudges to the
    untrained eye.
  • Perception is therefore our interpretation of
    sensory information.
  • (Cavanaugh, 1990, p. 139).

5
Perceptual Changes in Aging
  • There is a decline in the ability to observe
    forms that have been embedded in patterns.
  • Researchers are interested in whether these
    perceptual changes could be due to experiential
    or biological causes.
  • Research shows that there are reduced rates of
    processing, due to changes in the nervous system.

6
Sensation
  • Cavanaugh (1990) defines sensation as the
    reception of physical stimulation and its
    translation into neural impulses (p. 139).

7
Absolute Threshold
  • Our absolute threshold refers to the smallest
    amount of stimulation required before we could
    detect that there was a stimulus present
    (Cavanaugh, 1990, p. 141).
  • It is difficult to determine age-related changes
    in the absolute threshold.

8
Age-Related Changes in Vision and Hearing
  • Age-related changes in the eye are of two forms
    structural and retinal.
  • Structural changes occur in the 4th decade of
    life.
  • Retinal changes occur in the 6th decade of life.
  • (Cavanaugh, 1990, p. 143)

9
Age-related Changes in Vision
  • Require higher levels of illumination
  • Respond with greater sensitivity to glare
  • Presbyopia
  • Color Sensitivity
  • Acuity
  • Adaptation

10
Age-Related Changes in Hearing
  • Presbycusis is a form of age-related hearing
    loss.
  • Change is a result of
  • 1) Neural changes
  • 2) Sensory changes
  • 3) Metabolic changes
  • 4) Mechanical changes

11
Information Processing
  • Research demonstrates that older adults go
    through the same types of processing as younger
    adults, but at a slower rate.

12
Attention
  • There are changes in attention, or the energy or
    capacity to support cognitive processing. (p.
    98).
  • In addition, Rybash, Roodin, Hoyer (1995)
    indicate that there are definite changes in
    arousal and alertness, the processes associated
    with information selection, and the ability to
    handle multiple sources of information( p. 98).

13
Semantic Memory Episodic
Memory
  • Semantic memory refers to knowledge we have
    acquired about the world.
  • Episodic memory refers to the memories we have
    about events we have experienced in our lives.
  • For example, older adults may remember how to
    play a game they learned in childhood, but not
    remember when or even how they learned the game.

14
Our Working Memory
  • Rybash, Roodin, Hoyer (1995) acknowledge that
    there are age-related changes in our working
    memory, which refers to the processes and
    structures involved in simultaneously holding
    information and using that information (p. 103).

15
Life-Events Model of Adaptation and Coping
  • A way to link stress and coping to the
    identification of life events that heighten
    hormonal and neurochemical reactions that may
    lead to illness.

16
The Cognitive Model of
Adaptation Coping
  • Emphasis is on the adults perception of
    potentially stressful events in life.
  • While some people see events as a challenge and
    an opportunity for growth, others may see those
    same events as a source of tension, anxiety and
    dread (Cavanaugh, 1990, p. 339).

17
Transitions in adult life
  • Periods of change that tend to alternate with
    periods of stability
  • Levinson and colleagues refer to this as a
    persons life structure or the underlying
    pattern or design of a persons life at any given
    time (Levinson Levinson, 1996, p.22)
  • Salient point CHANGE is fundamental to adult
    life

18
Types of Transitions
  • Anticipated
  • Expected to occur in ones life
  • Unanticipated
  • Unexpected and do not have a typical time when
    they are likely to occur
  • Nonevent
  • The ones an individual expects that do not occur
  • Sleeper
  • Occurs gradually, often unnoticed but eventually
    culminates in change

19
Relationship of Life Transitions to Learning and
Development
  • For learning to occur, the experiences need to
    be
  • Discomforting
  • Disquieting
  • Puzzling enough to not reject or ignore but to
    allow reflection
  • IT IS THEN THAT LEARNING TAKES PLACE!

20
Cultural and Contextual factors shape learning
during transitions
  • It is the meaning we assign to an event that
    determines learning potential
  • Race, gender, socioeconomic status, education,
    and cultural context contribute to the meaning an
    individual assigns to an event
  • Example consider divorce
  • For some it is traumatic and painful whereas for
    others, in an abusive or non-caring relationship,
    it is liberating

21
Learning from a life event begins with attending
and reflection
  • Boud, Keogh, and Walker (1985) define reflection
    as those intellectual and affective activities
    in which individuals engage to explore their
    experiences in order to lead to new
    understandings and appreciations (p. 19)
  • Outcomes include a new perspective on the
    experience, a change in behavior, or a commitment
    to action
  • Learning in this situation can be additive or
    developmental

22
Steps to cope with Transformative or
developmental transitions
  • Accommodate the change
  • Solve the problem
  • Neutralize the stress
  • Actively engage with the event (even though it
    may be painful to do so)
  • Skar (2004) equates working through these
    critical life events to Complexity Theory
    disordered phases to more complex stages of
    order that leads to a new self-organization (p.
    259)

23
Characteristics of Developmental Transitions
  • Usually are sudden and dramatic, unplanned, and
    unanticipated
  • Experience is extremely vivid and can be
    described in great detail
  • Involve a profound change in the personal
    architecture of the identity
  • Experience is positive
  • Changes are permanent
  • From a study by White, W.L. (2004) dealing with 7
    historical cases of profound change

24
Other research and interests into adult learning
and development
  • Kegan (1994) interest in the structure of adult
    thinking and how to foster high levels of
    consciousness
  • Movement from concrete to abstract and then on to
    dialectical thinking, the signature of adult
    thinking.

25
Responding to adults in transition
  • Educators sensitive to the fact that 83 of
    adult learners are in transition could assist
    learners in the acquisition of new skills,
    attitudes,and behaviors that facilitate movement
    through the transition
  • Provide knowledge the learner in transition may
    not have (resources, support groups, etc.)
  • Provide a safe environment
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